At-will employment means the employer can terminate an employee at any time, for any reason that isn’t illegal, without warning — and the employee can quit at any time, for any reason, without warning. This is the default employment relationship in every U.S. state except Montana (which requires cause after a probationary period).
“Any legal reason” is the critical qualifier. At-will does not mean unlimited discretion. An employer cannot terminate an employee for:
- Discriminatory reasons: Race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age (40+), disability, genetic information, or pregnancy (federal law). Many states add sexual orientation, gender identity, and other protected categories.
- Retaliation: Filing a workers’ compensation claim, reporting safety violations (OSHA), reporting wage theft, participating in a discrimination investigation, or exercising other legally protected rights.
- Exercising legal rights: Jury duty, voting, military service, taking legally mandated leave (FMLA where applicable).
At-will employment does not eliminate the need for documentation. While termination doesn’t legally require cause in most states, documented performance issues protect the business against wrongful termination claims. If a terminated employee alleges discrimination, the business’s defense is that termination was for legitimate, documented performance reasons — not for a protected characteristic. Without documentation, it’s the employer’s word against the employee’s.
Practical implication: treat at-will as a legal backstop, not a management strategy. Follow the progressive discipline process described in Managing Employees for the Long Term — verbal warning, written warning, final warning, termination — with documentation at each step.